SchoolStory by ROE #30

Teaching in 2026 — Is it a Revolution? Is it the New Normal? (Or is it Both?)

Journey12 Season 1

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0:00 | 47:55

Today’s conversation lives right at the intersection of urgency and hope.

Across Illinois — and really across the country — we’re facing a reality that can’t be ignored: fewer young people are choosing to become educators, veteran teachers are feeling the weight of the work more heavily than ever, and the narrative surrounding the profession has grown louder, harsher, and often unfairly narrow. And yet… something remarkable is still happening inside classrooms, inside colleges of education, and inside communities that refuse to let the story end there.

In this episode, we’re joined by Dr. Victoria Grove Scott, Dean of the College of Education at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, and Diana Rea, Superintendent of Du Quoin Unit District 300. Together, they offer a candid, grounded look at what teaching looks like in 2026 — not just through the lens of recruitment and retention, but through dignity, relationships, structure, and belief in the work itself.

We talk about why fewer people are being encouraged to teach…
Why those who do choose the profession often do so despite the noise…
And how instructional coaching, “grow-your-own” programs, and deeply human leadership are quietly rebuilding momentum from the inside out.

This isn’t a conversation about slogans or silver bullets. It’s about what actually sustains educators — and what might just re-ignite a calling in a generation that’s being told, far too often, to look elsewhere.